Endless Thread - Free To Be Childfree
Episode Date: December 5, 2019r/childfree is one of the fastest growing communities on Reddit and it's for people who do NOT want children. They don't want to be told why they should have them, how much they'll regret it if they ...don't, and how "selfish" they are for not "contributing to society." This choice is becoming more common, yet it's still questioned ferociously. We hear from some of these people and explore how this Reddit community offers support when friends and family don't.
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at WBUR Boston. I am a 34-year-old Caucasian female. I grew up in a rural town in the Pacific
Northwest. At a very young age, I did decide that I did not want to have children.
Hi, my name is Summer. I'm from Kenya and I'm child free, which is very odd for the society that I've grown up in.
Since I was 18, I've been trying to have my tubes tied to no avail.
Society will always judge you anyway. Just do whatever you want. That's what I say anyway.
Watching all of my friends have children now,
I can see how exhausted they are financially, emotionally,
how depleted their relationships are
because it's so difficult for them to be able to be a part of a partnership
as well as try to raise these tiny humans.
My name is Aaron. I'm from Austin.
I'm 33 single and I work in tech.
My favorite never have I ever answer is I've never changed a diaper
and I plan on keeping it that way.
My name is Ben.
I live in Massachusetts.
I'm pretty old, but I look amazing.
I am married and I have twins who are two and a half years old.
My favorite never have I ever answer is that I never have calculated the number of diapers I've changed.
And I planned on keeping it that way up until this episode, but I couldn't resist.
I've changed Amory.
I believe in the ballpark of three to four thousand diapies.
Okay, my name is Amory. I'm not as old as Ben. I also live in Massachusetts. I have changed some diapers like anyone else who grew up babysitting. But I honestly don't know if there are more in my future. Because I don't know for sure if kids are in my future. I might end up child free.
Amory, do you remember when we first started talking about making an episode that involved the child free community on Reddit?
Yeah, and I specifically remember seeing that community for the first time
because it felt like I had entered another dimension.
Or like I was walking into a speakeasy
where people were doing things and talking about things
that I didn't think you could talk about.
But you know, I showed it to you, right?
You remember that part of it.
Yes, I remember.
And I'm the dad.
Yeah.
So, you know, I just want to say that.
Well, if you are a Redditor, whether you have kids now or not,
you may have stumbled upon the child-free community yourself
because it's been exploding on Reddit.
In just the last year or so,
the group has doubled in size,
from 300,000 members to more than 700,000.
There are a few reasons for this.
People who might have considered having kids in the past
are looking at climate change
and thinking they don't want to subject their kids
to environmental destruction,
or take part in environmental destruction by having kids.
The UN warns me,
only have until 2030 to keep global warming below a point where entire ecosystems will be lost.
Also, money. Some estimates put the cost of having and raising a kid in middle class America
at a quarter of a million dollars without money for college.
When adjusted for inflation, the cost of raising a child born in 2012 is 23% higher than for a
child born in 1960. But there's also this kind of long arc of history thing happening too,
where women in particular have more and more freedom and interest in pursuing things
other than bearing and raising children.
And there's an awakening happening about the culture of pressure around having kids in our society.
And child free is part of that awakening.
I want to say I think we're a pretty good duo to tackle this one, Amory,
because I'm sympathetic to people who don't want kids and I respect their point of view,
but I'm also a dad who's maybe a little skeptical of some parts of the child-free thing.
And you are a fence sitter.
Another piece of lingo around child free, a person who is on the fence about having kids.
But yeah, I think we got this.
We got this.
Today's episode, Free to be Child Free.
I'm Ben Brock Johnson.
I'm Amory Severson, and you're listening to Endless Thread.
The show featuring stories found in the vast ecosystem of online communities called Reddit.
We're coming to you from WBUR, Boston's NPR station.
We tapped into our own childlike energy when we greeted Amy.
Amy.
Yes.
It's Benny.
Hello.
It's Ben Johnson and Amory.
Amory.
Hi.
How are you?
Hello.
I'm well.
How are you guys?
Pretty good.
Amy was well, but hungry.
I'm sorry you haven't had lunch yet.
That sounds rough.
Oh, no, that's okay.
Maybe if you had progeny, they would have served you some lunch by now.
Right?
I know.
One of many reasons I'm making.
such a huge mistake. Amy Blackstone is a sociology professor at the University of Maine,
and she's child-free. But that's not how she thought things would turn out. If you asked me,
I had a plan. When I was 10 or 11, I knew that I was going to start having children when I was 20.
I would have two kids, a boy and a girl, and I would be the cool mom who picked my kids up at
school and, you know, showed up with Capri Sons and in my leg warmers and mini-skirt. This was the 80s.
So I had this real vision.
Fast forward a decade and a half from the kids drink era of Capri's Sun to the 1990s,
a.k.a. the brief but glorious rule of the drink sunny delight.
Amy had married her high school sweetheart.
She had a Ph.D., a fulfilling career, and no children.
Yet?
By the time I hit my mid-30s and was still answering with the,
I'm too young, I'm not interested yet.
Maybe later.
I realized maybe something else is going on.
Maybe I don't want to have kids.
And that was the point at which I really started thinking more deeply about parenthood as a choice.
So Amy did what you might expect a doctor of sociology to do.
She started looking into the topic.
I went to find research to sort of answer that question of what's wrong with me.
Why am I not feeling that maternal instinct?
And I discovered there was less sociological work on the experience of being child-free and on the process by which people make this decision than I expected to find.
Amy started doing her own research, and she and her husband Lance started a blog called We're Not Having a Baby.
They share research, rants, memes, and stories, including the one about how they, quote, came out as child-free to Amy's family.
A lot of child-free people use that expression, by the way.
Amy says it's not intended to take away from the LGBTQ experience of coming out.
It's meant to draw parallels between the ways in which people push back
against what mainstream society sees as normal and natural and appropriate.
For Amy, her coming out took even her by surprise.
Lance and I happened to be hosting my nephew's first year birthday.
And at his birthday party, my sister, out of my sister,
So when are you and Lance going to give Josh a cousin?
And like I just had this very visceral reaction to that question
and, you know, had been thinking for a while at this point that I didn't want to be a mother
and felt uncomfortable in that place.
And so when my sister asked this question, I just blurted out, never.
And the whole room just sort of went silent.
Amy says this was a really uncomfortable moment.
And it felt like an outsized reaction, but it felt right.
So it was freeing to declare loudly that she really was not going to have kids.
Amy declared her decision even louder this year when she published a book on the topic.
It's called Child Free by Choice.
And probably the first step in understanding what it means to be child free is understanding what the term child free means.
I chose to use that term.
And, you know, the other term that people talk about,
about is childless or voluntarily childless.
And for many child free people, the term childless doesn't accurately or adequately
represent their experience.
It's putting the emphasis on a thing that we don't have because we've chosen not to have it.
Yeah, it suggests incomplete.
Right, right.
Opting out of having kids isn't new.
But the concept of it being a movement or a political choice, child free, voluntarily childless,
whatever you call it, it seems.
to be growing. And the conversation about it in more recent years can probably be traced back to a couple
of movements in the 1960s and 1970s. First up, the second wave feminist movement, which is connected
to the FDA approving the birth control pill in 1960, also Roe v. Wade, which came 13 years later,
legalizing abortion. These two landmark events gave people more control than ever before in their
decisions about parenthood. We're all better off when women have
have equal access to health care, to the workplace, to education, when they're able to control
and make their own decisions about their reproductive lives and their bodies.
Next up, something called the Zero Population Growth Movement, focusing on, you guessed it,
our expanding population post-baby boom.
And then the Zero Population Growth Movement really raised our awareness about humans' impact
on the environment, particularly in Western nations.
with, you know, different consumption patterns than other nations around the world.
According to Pew Research Data from 2015, about 15% of women in the U.S.
reached their 40th birthday without having given birth.
But Amy is quick to point out that the data is far from perfect.
A woman who doesn't have a child is not necessarily a child-free woman.
I mean, we know what proportion of women end their lives without ever having children.
But we don't have good data on...
Why?
Right, exactly.
Among those women, which of them is childless, which of them wanted to become parents but didn't or couldn't for any number of reasons, and which of them is child-free.
What demographers do know is that we're in an extended era of declining fertility rates in this country, which is strange because there are more women of child-bearing age these days than there were a decade ago.
But we don't know how many of the people.
people opting out or delaying parenthood are doing so because they're choosing to be part of this
child-free movement. And so we don't know how big the movement is.
While you can't currently measure the growth of the entire child-free movement,
you can measure it on Reddit, where there is a child-free community that recently has been
going gangbusters.
Currently, we're growing at more than 1,200 subscribers per day.
You heard that right, and you heard it from Chris.
I'm a 35-year-old German guy, and I'm currently in Sujo, China.
And I'm actually one of the moderators of the Child Free Forum.
These days, Chris lives in China.
But before that, he lived in Kenya, Madagascar, Nigeria, Tanzania, Liberia, Norway, Luxembourg.
All right, we get it. He's well-traveled.
Guy makes Jason Bourne look like a homebody.
Chris has worked in banking, tourism, transportation, medical device technology.
All right, we get it.
He's also a Swiss Army man.
And Chris says his career hopping globe-trotting lifestyle
has become a bit of a joke between him and the friends of his who have kids.
And they see me posting on Facebook and Instagram.
I'm now in Thailand.
I'm in Vietnam.
I'm doing a coffee roasting workshop in Bali and stuff like that.
And they're like, yeah, and I'm just taking the little one to the park.
And here I am with the little one going to the doctor, to the dentist and whatsoever.
Chris says there's always a boom and growth of the subreddit this time of year.
Probably because the holidays mean family gatherings.
And family gatherings mean an onslaught of unsolicited comments, questions, and opinions about your life choices.
Things like...
What? You don't like kids?
Well, it's different when it's your own, you know.
Don't you want to give your parents' grandchildren?
But who will take care of you when you're old?
You're young. You'll change your mind.
But you two would make such cute kids together.
And how about this one?
Straight from the Pope.
Translation, not having children is a selfish choice.
The child free have a term for these kinds of statements, bingas.
Yeah, well, a bingo is basically coming from the old bingo game,
where basically that you have a square piece of paper
and you have a couple of common expressions that you're going to see
that you're going to hear over your lifetime,
simply meaning you hear it so many times
that you're bound to have five in a row someday
and then you're going to win a prize.
Bingo!
Bingo! Bingo! Bingo!
There's no actual prize in the Child Free Subreddit.
But there's a wealth of information,
reading materials, FAQs, Best of Discussion Threads,
and a compilation of comebacks to all those bingoes.
In response to the whole,
you're too young to know for sure argument.
One comeback reads,
I'm too young to decide I don't want children,
but somehow I'm not too young to decide I do want children.
To Pope Francis's selfish argument, take your pick.
Like, I'm selfish for not wanting to bring an unwanted child into this world?
Or how am I selfish for putting my own happiness over a non-existent being?
A place for people to post arguments and snarky comebacks might sound unproductive.
then again, there are four babies born every second.
So people in the child-free community feel like it's a refuge
for a minority that faces intense cultural pressure.
Even with 700,000 subscribers that we are just about approaching,
compared to 7 billion people in the world that's still next to nothing.
And that means if you want to get any kind of support from like-minded people,
then the internet is the best place to find.
and such a support community.
This is really interesting to me
because, Amory, I've mentioned this quote
from author William Gibson that gets repeated
all the time in the tech and sci-fi world,
which is, the future is here.
It's just not evenly distributed.
Yeah, you've mentioned that a lot.
So I think that in a similar way,
the child-free conversation is here.
It's just not evenly distributed.
And what I mean by that is
how and whether people are having this conversation
and their ability to have it depends a lot
on where you are in the world
and what kind of community you're living in.
This is especially true
when you live in a place
where being child-free
isn't just atypical.
It's practically unheard of.
We don't get it.
How can you a woman, a Kenyan woman,
not want to have children?
That's crazy.
This is Summer,
aka Honest Summer on Reddit,
who you heard from at the top of the show,
a 27-year-old woman
who sent us a voice memo from Nairobi, Kenya.
I don't think I'm joking.
You know?
I think, oh, you're just saying that because right now you're too busy, your career, woman, you know.
Oh, that is so feminist.
You know, feminists is still used as an insult, which I find insulting.
Summer has been pretty career-focused.
She recently got her law degree.
But she says one of the main reasons she doesn't want children is because of recent bouts with severe depression.
My mental health is so important for me after almost.
losing my life by my own hands.
So ultimately I realized that, you know, kids who depend on you for every waking moment of their lives for at least 18 years, I couldn't do it.
The realization that you don't have to become a parent has been liberating for summer.
She always thought she would just end up a mother, that she'd follow the so-called life script that is more.
or less expected. Go to school, get a job, get married, have kids, die.
Some people in the child-free community rip up that life script a lot sooner than others.
There's never been a bone in my body that said, hey, I see myself in the future with two kids, a wife, and picket fence.
This is Wikifido on Reddit. You can call him Jason. Just don't expect him to show up to your kid's birthday party.
Through the course of my life, I've avoided situations with law.
Lots of kids holding babies, just anything that had a overtly nurturing towards a child human being.
I've just never felt that compulsion.
It's not just human babies, Jason is talking about.
When he was in middle school, he was assigned to take care of one of those robot babies.
You know, the thing they give you in health class that show you how much work babies are just to scare you out of having sex.
Ben, did you ever have to take care of one of those?
I did not, and it chose.
Well, Jason did not want to take care of this robot baby,
and he was pretty tech savvy, so...
Being the curious individual that I am,
I said, oh, hey, I'm going to go ahead and see how this thing works,
and I used a screwdriver, took it apart,
and found that it had an SD card in it,
and then when I put the SD card into the computer,
I found out how it was keeping score,
of you keeping track of, you know, what you were doing to the baby, positive, negative,
or otherwise.
Figured out how the scoring worked.
Gave myself a B-plus.
You hot-wired the baby.
Yes, I did.
If you are literally hacking your way out of simulated parenthood, yeah, maybe you shouldn't opt
into the real thing.
But around the same time Jason was using his tech skills for homework, Kluge, something
else was going on.
Something that he thinks has shaped.
his view of kids in general.
I did end up in the emergency room twice as a victim of bullying.
So I think to some extent that as far as nurture goes in cooking my brain in such a way
that has me with a very negative view of children and things like that, that may be a
contributing factor, certainly.
Now, not all kids become bullies, obviously, and not all kids become victims of bullying,
but there's an uncertainty and a lack of control in becoming a parent that makes Jason and maybe other child-free people uncomfortable.
Will the child have medical issues on their birth?
Will they, you know, be a certain way throughout their middle and high school years?
You don't know you can't plan around that.
It makes you very anxious and uncomfortable.
I totally get this perspective, by the way.
When you become a parent, you definitely lose some of your sovereignty as an individual,
person. But you also have to accept this whole new set of realities that are outside of your control,
which can be stressful to even imagine. And for someone like Jason, the answer is simple. Avoid that
anxiety by just not having kids. Avoiding having kids less simple. We'll get to that in a minute.
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So we're talking about the decision
to have kids.
Specifically, the decision
to not have kids.
To be child.
free, which is something I'm thinking about. As of right now, I'm a fence sitter, which has its
own community on Reddit, by the way. People sharing their fears and frustrations and asking a lot
of questions. A really common question? My partner wants kids, but I'm on the fence. Is that a deal breaker?
I married my first husband under the impression that he was fully aware because of conversations
we had that I was not interested in having any children, and we subsequently divorced because
he let me know that he had always wanted to have children and thought that he would be able
to change my mind.
This is Levina Howard, who we heard from earlier.
She's clearly not a fence sitter, so, yeah, the decision over kids can be a deal breaker.
But the reality is, the decision about having kids isn't always a conscious decision,
case in point.
Ben Brock Johnson, I was not planned. I was a special surprise snowflake. And you still are.
But according to recent data, about 45% of children currently being born in the U.S. are unplanned
for a variety of reasons. To someone like Jason, the Redditor who hotwires mechanical babies
and avoids real ones at all costs, this statistic is unsettling. Well, I'm doing my damnedest to
attempt to get a vasectomy.
Mm-hmm.
Doing your damnedest, but not succeeding at the moment?
No.
Most doctors will, since it is an elective procedure, most, you know, kick it down the line
or some outright just say, no, you're too young.
Jason has seen five doctors about this so far with no luck.
And it's a common experience, even more common for women,
to have a medical professional look askance at a permanent or even not.
permanent surgery. Which is messed up because once you have kids, you go in there and they're like,
yep, no problem. And this is also why there is a list on the subreddit of the child-free friendly
doctors by state and even by country. Also a how to get sterilized guide with a ton of information
about the different sterilization options, including one that I confess I didn't even know about,
and neither did the Redditor's subtlety 87. I discovered bilateral self-indexam. I discovered bilateral self-indexam
through the Reddit Child Freeboard.
And as soon as I read about it, I was like, oh, that, that's what I want.
Bilateral salpinjectomy, a removal of the fallopian tubes.
Not to be confused with tubal ligation, having your tubes tied.
Subtility is only a couple years older than Jason, but she was able to find a doctor who
would sterilize her, in part because she's had bad reactions to several other types of birth
control.
But she was told she'd have to wait one month to get the surgery, a mandate.
waiting period in the socially conservative state where she lives.
She says it was worth the wait, especially because she has a demanding career in the performing
arts. And she says she doesn't have room for kids. Could she make room? Sure. People who want
kids make room. Different people want different things. I think there's this idea that there's
a massive lack, you know, and I'm not looking to fill a void in my life. There's no void to begin with
for me. And, you know, a lot of people say it's like, oh, there's nothing like the feeling of
watching your kids playing and having your spouse right next to you. And I'm like, I also get
similar feelings of contentment and joy and happiness, you know, in the little home and the
little family that I have built. And I just, I think that to discount someone else's happiness
is quite hurtful. And I think people often, they don't, they don't mean.
to do that, but it happens a lot.
Discounting people's happiness goes both ways, though.
And you definitely see some of this in the child-free community online,
people asking how anyone could ever want children,
calling misbehaving children crotch demons or screaming meat sirens.
If you are a fence sitter,
some of the negativity you find in there towards children
could drive you away.
There's also a lot of judgment about what is and isn't good parenting,
which an actual parent might,
find a little rich, Ben?
I mean, I won't say I never judge other parents, but I also definitely think it's tough to judge
parents if you've never been a parent. I think it's also really tricky to judge someone who's
chosen not to be a parent about that choice, which is obviously a big part of what the child
free community is about. Yeah, for the most part, it's a safe space for people to navigate an uncommon
and even unpopular life choice together without worrying about offending people in their
lives who've made the opposite choice.
Which brings us to Maxine Trump.
No relation to, you know.
I made a documentary called Trump's Against Trump, which it's just a short little doc,
all the Trumps that didn't vote for Trump.
That's what Maxine does.
She makes documentaries, sometimes about things that hit close to home.
Like her latest film, To Kid or Not To Kid.
I always put off my decision to have children.
Childless women can never be happy.
The childless choice is a sort of cancer in our culture.
We need to have higher birth rates in this country.
The film follows Maxine to conferences, meet-up groups,
and into difficult conversations with her husband and her own mother
as she tries to figure out whether or not she really is going to be child-free,
which, spoiler, she is.
Maxine didn't know about the child-free subreddit
when she started making her film back in 2013.
She'd been feeling alone in her uncertainty,
even more so after one particular conversation with her best friend.
Who happened to be a parent?
You know, this world is really kind of reaching a point where
how can we sustain the people that are already here
with resources and food and energy and et cetera, et cetera.
And I was saying, you know, people that have really large families,
I said, I thought they were selfish.
Now, that's not great language to begin a conversation,
but she was my friend and I was trying to, you know,
and I was saying, you know, I don't know whether I want kids.
Like, if I don't want kids, I feel really, really sure that I shouldn't have them
because the world doesn't need any more kids.
And she just took it the wrong way.
And our relationship has never been the same since.
Maxine hasn't spoken to this friend in a decade,
but she learned a lot from this conversation.
And she wants others to as well, including me and Ben.
Just as I was telling Maxine that I think my friends and colleagues will support me if I don't have children.
I'm going to get Amory the best gift when she has kids.
Okay, so Maxine, he makes this joke all the time.
Right.
All the time.
Ben, that needs to stop.
I mean, even the little subtle jokes all the time is a little pressure.
Sorry, Ben.
Well, that's kind of what I was...
Well, we talk about that, you know?
Yeah, we have talked about that.
And that's kind of where I was going with this, is that.
You know, it's not that I think I'm going to be disowned.
It's like the little disappointment, you know, knowing that certain people are taken more seriously because they're parents.
Right.
But I do think there is potential for a greater awareness as more and more people learn that it's okay to say you don't want children.
I totally agree.
And for what it's worth, I will say fully on the record that I will love you, Amory, like equally.
either way if you have kids or don't have kids.
Thank you.
And I think like you would be an incredible parent.
So like that's where...
I get that a lot too, though.
I get that a lot.
But that's the thing is like I think that's okay for me to feel that way.
Like I don't think that there's anything wrong with like that being a place where I'm coming from.
But as a friend who knows that A. Marie is exploring, you know, is having this sort of, she's on the spectrum of where
you know, flopping between either or.
And Amory, obviously, I don't know you very well.
But giving your friend the room by not sort of saying,
oh, you'll be a good mum, or you'll do, do, do, do, do,
it's like a respect for where she is and her decision making.
Just giving the room, because we've been, it's been an indoctrination.
And what you're doing by holding back, Ben, is allowing,
is not falling into the trap.
And I do say trap of we are being told this is the next step for us all the time in society everywhere.
There's a term for this, by the way. It's called pro-natalism, encouragement to have children,
whether it's coming from your church or from your government like the Danes did a few years ago with their Do It for Denmark campaign or directly from a friend.
But it can also be our friends that help us push back against the pro-natalism.
messaging that we're bombarded with.
By you being a great friend and giving, holding back, you're saying, listen, I'm supporting
you subtly by not saying you'll be a great mom or having the jokes.
It's giving her that space to just kind of while she's deliberating about what she wants
to do to make her not feel weird if she doesn't decide to have kids.
Does that make sense?
I think like it makes sense in some ways.
the other side of that to me is that like your friends are people who influence you your friends are
people who like tell you what their perspective is right see what you're saying influence you're saying
influence um of course but why do you want to influence her one way or the other don't you just want
her to be happy oh of course but but my perspective is a hundred percent that like if she like if she decides to
have children that she will be happy. And so, like, if she makes that choice. And if she decides not to
have children, she'll also be happy. Totally. But you may not be saying that as much as you're
saying the other side of the equation. Okay, this is a good point. Although, in fairness to Ben,
he does a pretty good job of painting a realistic portrait of parenthood for me on a regular basis.
I get the cute picks and the tales of late night.
tantrums. Definitely more tantrum stories, actually. Yeah, and this is the part where personally,
I think maybe Maxine's not really privy to the nature of our relationship and our conversations
about this as friends. Like from where I sit, a true friend is someone who will tell you or give
you a sense when they have a different perspective, even if it's not super comfortable. Not to tell
you you you're wrong to not have kids, but to say, that's interesting, I look at it a different
way, and here's how I look at it. So that in sharing you,
your different perspectives, you both make more informed choices, whatever choices you make.
That's fair. As long as you're not disappointed if my husband and I ignore your perspective entirely when we make our choice.
Of course. I fully expect that. It's also really important to me to give space and only respond when your friend asks you for advice, right? And I think I'm pretty careful about that generally.
Yeah. No, it's usually a reaction to something.
Like you say how much it must suck to have kids and I say.
I have never done that. I would never do that.
Fair. But I make jokes about reveling in your adventures as a future parent, possibly, when we're already talking about kids.
But because we have the rapport that we do, I can just say, you know, yeah, yeah, and roll my eyes, and that's the end of it.
But maybe I will start responding with a comment about how well-rested I am or how not sticky my house is.
Oh, so sticky.
And then I'll say, yeah, yeah, and roll my eyes at you.
And I expect nothing less.
Okay.
So the bottom line is, you can't really know what life would have been like with kids or without them if you're in the other position.
Just like it's true that for me, there are things I know now as a parent that I didn't know even the day before my kids were born.
And in the last few years, you might have learned a whole bunch of things that you didn't learn because you were busy parenting.
Totally.
Also, to be clear, we are co-workers.
as well as friends.
And as a co-worker, I know that your choices about family are really none of my business.
Also, it's important to know that for a woman, it's really different.
Maxine made this point too, and Ben, you get that.
I do.
Obviously, I grant on its face absolutely that this impacts women very differently than men,
and that's, you know, we can start there.
But the other thing I would say is that, like, I also think there's no question that for me,
throughout my life, you know, already in the two and a half years that I've been a parent and probably
for the rest of my life, I will spend many, many days wondering what could have been.
There's no question about that. So to me, like, that part of it is like, that's kind of basic as well.
And so, you know, I'll just sort of put it bluntly for the sake of illustration.
Like, I think it's possible that you, you have made a mistake that you don't know you've made.
Oh, controversial, Ben. Controversial. I'm just putting it out there, right? And like, I may, if I didn't have kids, I may have, I may have made a mistake that I didn't know I made. Right? So, like, you can throw that right back to him, Maxine, you know?
Thank you, Henry. Thank you. You, you, Ben, may have made a mistake that you don't know about yet. I mean, you know, I get a hints of it all the time.
Exactly.
No, I mean that. I don't mean that in a, I truly mean that in a like, I mean that in an empathetic way, not in like accusatory.
I'm still trying to find the empathy. I'm trying to find the empathy in that statement. But, you know, I don't need to protest too much. Like, make the decision you want to make. Like, I don't care. I really don't care. I know what makes me happy. And that is going around the world, filming in an amazing places that I would never actually.
otherwise. And that makes me so happy. And that's what we're talking about really is what makes
you so happy. If you are pining desperately to have a child and you know that's your heart's desire,
good for you. And have that child and love that child and feel a satisfaction that I feel in my life.
It's kind of given me chills as I'm sitting here because this has been a really, really interesting
conversation because in the many podcasts or interviews that I've done, we don't always drill down
or have the time to get into the real psychology of it. So that's all I'm about. I'm just like
drill down, have the space, have the room to be able to really think about what makes you happy
and find that source and go with it. Amory, since our interview with Maxine, I've been thinking
a lot about this. And here's what I want to say. Okay. The clearest message I want to send to you
as someone on the other side of this is that having a kid for me and for I think a lot of parents
who live really full and happy lives, it wasn't an easy, clear decision. I think it's normal
to question your choice to be a parent even after you are a parent. And I think we need to be real
about that. Because while a lot of people really are positive about their feelings on this,
the child-free community is totally right that there's a messed up part of our society that
pretends it's not okay to not want kids or be unsure about this huge life choice.
I was a fenced sitter too, which I don't talk about that much.
And even though my life changed and I opted into the life script we've been talking about,
being a parent is still really scary.
I'm not often sure I have what it takes.
And even if I do, I'm afraid of what my kids will face on the playground and on the planet.
But when I wake up and take my kids out of their beds, it's awesome.
And, you know, my hope every day is that this is just part of my journey as a parent.
It's the cost of my choice to feel this way.
And at that level, I'm good with it.
Because nine days out of ten, I get my mind blown by these little maniacal people in my life.
And you don't have to become a parent to get that full heart feeling, but I definitely get it from being a parent.
So whatever you choose to do, Emory, I support you.
because you are great.
Thank you.
I appreciate that.
Yeah.
And I've been thinking about why your jokes about me becoming a parent sometimes get under my skin.
Yeah.
Even though I know your intentions are nothing but good.
And I know you don't get a vote in the matter.
I think it's because even in jest, it reinforces this idea of the life script.
You know, the idea that there's a path that I will inevitably follow
or a path that people at least expect me to follow.
Yeah, I get that.
And the thing is, that is just not how my life has gone so far.
Like, if I had done what people expected of me
or even what I expected of me,
I wouldn't have gone to school where I did.
I wouldn't have married or probably even met my husband.
And I just, I don't think I'd be making a podcast.
I really don't.
As fun as it is.
But I like making things up as I go along
and allowing myself to be surprised at how,
how happy I am with the choices I didn't think I'd make,
and how underwhelmed I am sometimes with the ones I did think I'd make.
And the same really goes for kids.
If I have them, it's going to be another thing that I did not see myself doing.
And like you, Ben, I might love it.
But if there's a big takeaway for me from working on this episode and having these conversations,
it's a much-needed reminder that there is no such thing.
as a life script.
So all I know is that
whether my husband and I have kids or not,
we're definitely getting a dog first.
Oh my God, you and your husband will have such cute dogs together.
You're damn right, we will.
Endless Thread is a production of WBUR, Boston's NPR station,
in partnership with Reddit.
Josh Swartz is our producer who also plans to do a coffee roasting workshop in Bali
as long as the policy is.
No stupid questions.
Iris Adler is our executive producer and if she ever hears a bingo in the office, she's like,
Hold my Cosmo.
Mix and sound design by Paul Vikas who thinks screaming meat sirens are just...
Mmm, forbidden snacks.
Michael Pope is our advisor at Reddit.
Kiyoma Toddler.
More editing help from WBUR managing producer, Kat Brewer,
extra production assistance from James Lindberg.
Our intern is Magdea Lamaata.
Maggie's fine.
For reactions to this episode or ideas for future episodes, hit us up on Reddit.
We are Endless underscore Thread.
We also have an official subreddit now.
You can find that and talk to us at endlessthread.red.red.com.
My co-host and producer is Amory Siebertson.
I'm senior producer and co-host Ben Brock Johnson.
I'll let myself out.
